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Cleveland Judge allows potential DREAMer Julio Tellez to stay in
the U.S. pending an asylum request, Attorney hopes for passage
of the DREAM Act
By Ingrid Marie Rivera, La Prensa Correspondent
Undocumented immigrant Julio Tellez is breathing sighs of
relief and wants to scream with joy.
Federal Immigration Judge Thomas Janas of the U.S.
District Court in Cleveland has once again set aside the order
to deport Tellez to Mexico. The judge has thus allowed Tellez to
stay in the U.S. for an additional two years, after Tellez’s
lawyer, Jorge Hernán Martínez, filed for an asylum
request, Jan.25, 2012.
Tellez’s next court date at the federal immigration court in
Cleveland is in March of 2014, where he will have to convince
the judge to grant him asylum.
After his court appearance Jan.25, Tellez wrote on Facebook,
“I’m super stoked! We were granted a two years court date until
2014! No more courts for a while! I (want) to scream so loud!”
Tellez, 25, of Hamilton, Ohio, who has been dealing with
immigration court appearances often every few months, called the
2-year-delay a great victory.
“I’m super excited. I feel like I’m 100 pounds lighter. I feel
like a huge weight has been taken off my shoulders. I feel so
happy,” Tellez said.
His lawyer, Martínez said he refuses to call the delay a
victory.
“I respect that Julio is happy; I’m happy too but I cannot say
that that is a big win,” he said. “I don’t want to portray that
as an accomplishment.”
Martínez said he filed an asylum request for Tellez in order to
gain more time.
But Martínez said by default, when an individual files for an
asylum request, he or she is given a future court date,
typically two years into the future, to allow the individual to
gather testimonies and any other evidence to build a case.
A two-year timeframe is usually the allotted time given Martínez
said, but there may be rare cases where individuals are granted
more than two years or granted only a few months to gather any
evidence.
Martínez said he plans to gather sufficient solid evidence
showing that Tellez, along with his mother and older sister,
came to the United States escaping domestic violence from
Tellez’s father in Mexico.
“I think we have a good case,” Martínez said. “We are preparing
the case, getting the information ready and waiting to see what
happens.”
In the meantime, Tellez has been celebrating his victory by
speaking to others.
Just one day after his court hearing, Jan.26, Tellez traveled to
San Francisco with a few other members of the Oscar Romero
Committee from Cincinnati to learn more about immigration law
and to speak to other undocumented immigrants and citizens
within church sites.
“I’m going to share my story, tell immigrants they have rights,”
Tellez said “We are empowering the community.”
While the asylum request is pending, immigrants may apply for a
work permit (a process taking roughly 3 to 4 months), a social
security number and a driver’s license.
If Tellez is approved for a work permit, he will then qualify
for the request of a driver’s license. Martínez said although
Tellez does not have legal status, he has already been assigned
a social security number, back when he first arrived in
California.
If asylum is granted, he can file for permanent residence after
one year.
Martínez said he hopes the request for asylum will win his
client enough time for a better legal move.
Attorney hopes for passage of the DREAM Act
“My hope is that in those two years we’ll have the DREAM Act,”
Martínez said “And (Tellez) could instead apply for that.” |